Re: (idm) oldschool timestretching?

From Kent Williams
Sent Thu, Jul 8th 1999, 02:40

Actually, all but the very best algorithms will be pretty stuttery --
Sound Forge will sound like this if you push it.


kent williams -- xxxx@xxxxxx.xxx 

On Wed, 7 Jul 1999, blipvert wrote:

> This is actually a stuttering trick that uis performed by chopping the sample
> into several segments and sequencing or triggering the sample segments in
> a quantized pattern. Try lowering the sampling resolution and triggering
> triplets. Think of the way you would chop up and re-trigger a break and
> aply it to vocals.
> 
> henrik str0mberg wrote:
> 
> > something that's been prying on my mind...
> >
> > when jungle was new and exiting (circa 1994) there was a lot of "staccato"
> > timestretching going on, i.e. "g-g-g-a-a-a-ng-ng-ng-s-s-s-t-t-t-a-a-a" (shy
> > fx & gunsmoke), i suppose due to bad timestretching software.
> >         how does one go about getting that effect today? are there any
> > plug-ins to peak or cubase vst that'll do it? i use a macintosh.
> >
> > while i'm asking, which would be the best app to convert mp3->aiff with?
> > peak 2.0? soundapp 2.61? are there any differences?
> >
> > hs
> >
> > _____________________________
> > what we are, we choose to be.
> 
> 
>